1 research outputs found
On-Resin Recognition of Aromatic Oligopeptides and Proteins through Host-Enhanced Heterodimerization
Peptide dimerization
is ubiquitous in natural protein conjugates
and artificial self-assemblies. A major challenge in artificial systems
remains achieving quantitative peptide heterodimerization, critical
for next-generation biomolecular purification and formulation of therapeutics.
Here, we employ a synthetic host to simultaneously encapsulate an
aromatic and a noncanonical l-perfluorophenylalanine-containing
peptide through embedded polar−π interactions, constructing
an unprecedented series of heteropeptide dimers. To demonstrate the
utility, this heteropeptide dimerization strategy was applied toward
on-resin recognition of N-terminal aromatic residues
in peptides as well as insulin, both exhibiting high recycling efficiency
(>95%). This research unveils a generic approach to exploit quantitative
heteropeptide dimers for the design of supramolecular (bio)systems
